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Queue the Revolution's avatar

Wow, this sounds phenomenal. And I just loved the photo of your stunning, just beautiful, ingredients. So fresh that they’re probably squeaky, love it. We grow the Egyptian onions, too. My grandmother rips them out of the ground and throws them in the compost and then I sneak back there later and replant some in my section and eat or freeze the rest. I cleaned loads of the little “seed” bulbs to ferment but had to stop and put them in the fridge because my baby needed me, and then as the days went by time got away from me so I never got to it and ended up eating them as is instead. What a great recipe, I’ve never made kimchi because growing up I didn’t like it but I think I would like it now, since I love my fermented beets and turnips and sauerkrauts. Thanks for the inspiration and the lovely post. LOVED that you empowered us by mentioning how this small act of making our own foods and letting food be thy medicine means one less dollar towards big Ag and big Pharma. Food and bodily sovereignty, baby. May I add in here that using cash instead of cards in all transactions is another simple way that can have big effects against the globalist agenda if everyone joined in. Cheers

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ORION DWORKIN SI/CEBP's avatar

Great recipe! So many good ingredients in that purple dragon. It took me years to master the traditional kimchi to get the fizzy bites of fermented goodness. I'll try this out just to experience what it might taste like. Don't see any fish sauce in yours. Maybe less offensive to the nose perhaps? Thanks!

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